Project was implemented in 2015 by the "Green Balkans" Federation of Nature Conservation NGOs. The project funds were used to secure the implementation of educational and information activities aimed at promoting bats, their conservation significance, and the need for their preservation in Bulgaria with outstanding results for public awareness.

Funded byLe Gouvernement du Grand-Duché de Luxembourg and the EUROBATS Secretariat, the project was accomplished by members of Kharkov Bat Group. In July 2014 international team of bat researchers from Ukraine and Hungary surveyed bats in Bükk Mountains, the Bükk National Park (Hungary), with special focus of N. lasiopterus. The radio-telemetry field training was conducted as well.

Funded by the Italian Ministry of the Environment and Protection of Land and Seaand conducted by PhD. Mounir Abi-Said, the survey allowed to gather the information on the species present in the country and about some threats that they face. A part of funds was used to train young student volunteers how to study and monitor bats.

Funded by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA, UK) the project was conducted by the Bat Study Group (BSG) of Bird Protection Macedonia (BPM) to teach the BSG and other NGO members on bat biology and bat conservation in the field. The aim was to strengthen the national capacity for bat research and to establish a network of trained bat workers.

Funded byLe Gouvernement du Grand-Duché de Luxembourg and the EUROBATS Secretariat, the project was accomplished by members of Kharkov Bat Group. In July 2014 international team of bat researchers from Ukraine and Hungary surveyed bats in Bükk Mountains, the Bükk National Park (Hungary), with special focus of N. lasiopterus. The radio-telemetry field training was conducted as well.

Funded byLe Gouvernement du Grand-Duché de Luxembourg and the EUROBATS Secretariat, the project was accomplished by members of Kharkov Bat Group. In July 2014 international team of bat researchers from Ukraine and Hungary surveyed bats in Bükk Mountains, the Bükk National Park (Hungary), with special focus of N. lasiopterus. The radio-telemetry field training was conducted as well.

Four field expeditions to Ukraine, Georgia, Turkey and Romania were undertaken under the project in June-October 2014. 21 localities were inspected, 29 mist-netting nights were carried out and 880 individuals of 25 bat species were captured. Altogether we collected 382 fur samples and passed them to the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research for stable hydrogen analysis . 15 bat researchers and students were involved in the field work during the project.